Hi, thanks for the great site!
I'm a beginner to digital photography and to be honest almost an absolut beginner to photography . I do own an analog Canon EOS 300 that I haven't used in a while...
Now I was about to buy the 400D and thought about buying the
EF 28-135mm 1:3.5-5.6 IS USM lens instead of going with the kit lens. I have two questions:
1. Does that lens make sense at all or would pictures come out too dark? Is that lens crap in general? (The EF 24-105 mm 1:4 L IS USM is just a little expensive for me)
Now that Olympus announced the new DSLRs E-410 and E-510 I have a second question.
2. Should I wait for the Olympus E-510 and buy that one instead? (Maybe with the two lens kit?)

Thank you for any help and recommendation. Oli
(My budget is around 1000€, I want to be able to use my camera for any occasion).

1: The kit lens is certainly the weak point of the Canon 400D / XTi, but it's not all bad - I've taken plenty of good photos with it. But at the same time, if you can afford it, it's a great idea to upgrade it.

The thing to remember though is most DSLRs have smaller sensors than a frame of 35mm film, so any lenses you attach effectively have their focal lengths multiplied. In the case of the Canon 400D, they're all multiplied by 1.6 times, so the 28-135mm would act like a 45-216mm lens.

This might mean it has a more powerful telephoto, but it also means it no longer has wide angle capabilities. In order to deliver the same wide angle cover age as a 28mm on a film camera, you'd need 18mm on most DSLRs - that's why most DSLR kit lenses have 18-55mm focal lengths.

2: The Olympus E-510 looks like being a very impressive camera, and so long as the new sensor isn't noisy, I think it could easily become one of the best DSLRs around. The twin lens kit should also cover you for most types of shots. So if you can wait until June / July, I would advise seeing how it works out in practice. We will of course be reviewing it at Cameralabs, and there's a full preview here:

I wanted to mention you may also want to browse our feature about upgrading the kit lens on the Canon 400D - it covers a number of options from Canon and what benefits you can expect when upgrading. You can find it here: